Dutch Oven Chicken and Vinaigrette
Published Sept. 5, 2021

- Total Time
- About 2 hours
- Rating
- Comments
- Read comments
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Ingredients
- ¼cup olive oil
- 1medium onion (preferably yellow), trimmed, peeled and cut into eighths
- 1head garlic, cut crosswise
- 5fresh thyme sprigs
- 5fresh rosemary sprigs
- Fine or coarse sea salt
- Freshly ground black pepper
- 1whole chicken (about 4 pounds)
- ½lemon
- ¾cup white wine
- 2teaspoons Dijon mustard
- 2tablespoons wine vinegar (preferably sherry)
- 1teaspoon walnut oil (optional)
- 3 to 4handfuls salad greens
For the Chicken
For the Vinaigrette
For Serving
Preparation
- Step 1
Make the chicken: Heat oven to 450 degrees.
- Step 2
Pour 3 tablespoons of the olive oil into a Dutch oven large enough to hold the chicken, then toss in all but 1 piece of the onion. Add the garlic and 4 sprigs each of the thyme and rosemary. Stir to coat, then season generously with salt and pepper.
- Step 3
Pat the chicken dry, season the inside with salt and pepper, and tuck in the remaining piece of onion and herb sprigs. Rub the chicken with the remaining 1 tablespoon olive oil and season with salt and pepper. Squeeze the juice from the lemon half over the bird, and then pop the lemon inside it with the herbs and onion. Settle the chicken into the pot, breast side up. Pour in the wine and cover.
- Step 4
Roast the chicken for 60 minutes, then check on it: It’s done when a thermometer plunged into the thickest part of the thigh has reached 165 degrees. If it’s done but doesn’t have enough color for you, you can run it under the broiler for a few minutes; if it’s not done, remove the lid and continue to roast until done, 15 to 30 minutes more. Transfer the chicken to a platter, cover loosely with a foil tent, and let rest.
- Step 5
While the chicken rests, make the vinaigrette: Pour off the pan drippings, measure out 6 tablespoons and return them to the pot. (If your drippings are scant or very dark, you can still use them. Keep any extra drippings for another use.) Hold onto the garlic but discard the onion and herbs from the pot. Place the pot over medium heat, pour in ½ cup water, and boil for a couple of minutes, scraping the bottom of the pan to pick up any stuck bits. You should have about ⅓ cup of drippings; if they’re very chunky, strain them when you add them to the vinaigrette.
- Step 6
Working in a medium bowl, mash 6 to 8 cloves of the soft garlic with the mustard, then whisk in the vinegar. Slowly whisk in the reserved liquid, followed by the walnut oil, if using. Taste for salt and pepper, then pour the vinaigrette into a small pitcher.
- Step 7
To serve, carve the chicken, cutting it into quarters or eighths, and arrange on the platter. Pour over a little of the vinaigrette. Dress the salad greens lightly with vinaigrette and serve on the platter or in a shallow bowl. Pass the rest of the sauce at the table.
Private Notes
Comments
For many years, our Sunday "family dinner" has centered on a dish similar to this -- the "roast chicken with lemon" recipe from Marcella Hazan's Italian cookbook. Here the cavity is stuffed with a whole lemon and closed, after the lemon rind has been pricked with small holes to let the lemony steam saturate the chicken from the inside. I frequently add a selection of root vegetables around the bird, set on a rack in an open roasting pan, and make a delicious sauce with white wine and lemon.
This is a wonderful, classic French recipe which I have made many times. No dish is great without great ingredients. In this case it's the chicken. I'll bet you anything that Ms. Greenspan either went to her favorite butcher or farmer's market stall to buy the best bird that she could find.
I think this sounds amazing. My family does best with chicken parts - and I have a gorgeous Le Creuset 5 quart brasier that will accommodate the pieces and the aromatics. Has anyone done this? I think my only concern would be whether the garlic will soften enough in the time it takes to cook the pieces (which if they have their way will be boneless, skin on thighs and bone-in skin-on breasts (which cook in similar time). Thoughts?
If there were 6 stars i would give this recipe 7. I haven’t cooked a whole chicken in an age and had to look up how! As a time saver at the end, i removed the sprigs of herbs from the pan, added some stock made from the neck and giblets, and whizzed the onion garlic and all with a hand blender. Then added sherry vinegar and Dijon. As the chicken rested, I harvested arugula from our tiny garden and boiled some tiny potatoes. Fantastic, fragrant, flavorful, French, and so different from everything else i cook. Thank you, Dorie Greenspan.
I had a different salad planned, so I just stopped after step 4, which turns the recipe into really easy way to make a lot of delicious chicken. Love it!
Excellent. Lower cooking temp to 350 degs, add add’l time as necessary to reach 165 degs by meat thermometer. Add veggies (carrots, cauliflower, etc). Serve over kale, with brown rice for the sauce
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